Inside The Zehak Project’s Journey from Mental Health Support to a Complete Wellbeing Ecosystem

 

Five years ago, The Zehak Project entered India’s mental health landscape with a single mission. The aim was to make high-quality therapy more accessible, relatable and stigma-free for a generation that was only beginning to acknowledge the importance of emotional well-being. What began as a counselling-first organisation has now evolved into a full-fledged wellbeing ecosystem that integrates therapy, personalised diet planning, yoga sessions and at-home fitness guidance.

This transformation did not come from a boardroom strategy session. It came from everyday observations during therapy sessions and conversations with clients. Many individuals made emotional progress, yet struggled with the everyday pressures of fatigue, poor eating habits, irregular routines and chronic stress. People understood what to do, but they felt unable to do it. That gap between insight and execution shaped the next phase of Zehak’s journey.

The company realised that therapy alone could not carry the full weight of modern wellbeing. Human behaviour is deeply connected to lifestyle patterns. Clients often shared that stress increased when their meals were irregular, when their energy levels dipped, or when their body felt sluggish. Diet emerged as the most consistent trigger and the most consistent opportunity for change. Based on this realisation, Zehak placed nutrition at the centre of its expanded offering. Diet plans are now created to support emotional stability, improve energy and help clients develop healthier coping mechanisms.

Yoga and at-home fitness soon followed. Many clients, particularly corporate employees, shared that they lacked the time or comfort to visit gyms or fitness centres. The Zehak Project introduced at-home movement routines that are simple, adaptable and created specifically for individuals juggling demanding schedules. Yoga sessions are designed to reduce stress physiology, improve flexibility and support mood regulation. These services were intentionally built to complement therapy, not replace it.

As the organisation grew, it identified a new need among clients: access to diverse therapeutic backgrounds. Many employees working in global teams or multicultural environments preferred therapists who brought international perspectives or specialised training. Zehak responded by onboarding psychologists from different countries. This addition expanded the range of therapeutic styles available to clients and strengthened the organisation’s ability to work with culturally diverse populations.

On the corporate front, Zehak’s evolution was influenced by conversations with HR leaders, wellness directors and CXOs. Organisations shared that employees were struggling with problems that could not be addressed through a single lens. Burnout, trust issues, emotional exhaustion and conflict often stem from lifestyle patterns, team culture and external pressures. As a result, Zehak redesigned its workshop formats to include practical tools, science-backed frameworks and blended wellbeing components. Workshops now focus not only on understanding mental health, but on building skills that employees can apply in everyday situations.

The organisation describes its approach as empathetic, forward-thinking and grounded in real workplace realities. Instead of offering generic motivational talks, the company aims to deliver actionable solutions that are easy to integrate into busy lives. Zehak’s EAPs have been refined to include therapy, diet support, movement guidance and structured workshops that create sustainable change.

The team believes that the future of wellbeing in India must be rooted in practicality. Employees need solutions they can implement consistently. They also need options that feel welcoming, safe and aligned with cultural norms. Zehak’s expanded model attempts to meet these expectations by combining global expertise with Indian context and accessible delivery formats.

For the founders and team members who have been part of Zehak since its early days, this journey feels like a natural progression. Mental health is not a standalone field. It is an interconnected system. By integrating nutrition, movement and global clinical support, Zehak hopes to redefine what wellbeing can look like for Indian families and workplaces.

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